GRANULAR GRAPHICAL USER INTERFACE ELEMENT
A graphical user interface (GUI) element permits a user to control an application in both a coarse manner and a fine manner. When a cursor is moved to coincide or overlap the displayed GUI element, parameter adjustment is made at a first (coarse) granularity so that rapid changes to the target parameter can be made (e.g., displayed zoom level, image rotation or playback volume). As the cursor is moved away from the displayed GUI element, parameter adjustment is made at a second (fine) granularity so that fine changes to the target parameter can be made. In one embodiment, the further the cursor is moved from the displayed GUI element, the finer the control.
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This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 11/462,683, filed Aug. 4, 2006, and entitled “GRANULAR GRAPHICAL USER INTERFACE ELEMENT,” which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety for all purposes.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONThe invention relates generally to graphical user interfaces for computer systems and, more particularly, to a graphical user interface element providing multiple levels of granularity for application control.
In general, a user interface is the means through which a user interacts with a computer system. Graphical user interfaces (GUIs) employ windows and icons in conjunction with a cursor control device. Most cursor control devices include a switch for generating signals to the computer system to indicate a selection or other user action. The combination of windows, icons, and a cursor control device permits a user to operate in a visual “point-and-click” manner. As used herein, the phrase “point-and-click” refers to positioning a cursor on a display so it is over a desired image and activating a switch (e.g., a button, a finger tap or a stylus tap) on the cursor control device. One illustrative graphical user interface is the Finder™ interface for the Macintosh family of computer systems. (FINDER is a trademark of, and MACINTOSH is a registered trademark of, Apple Computer, Inc. of Cupertino, Calif.)
Equipment and application controls have been simulated for display through a GUI. For example, graphical representations of a volume control knob and a visual zoom slider control are indicative of GUI elements used in today's graphical user interfaces. To adjust the application's settings (e.g., the playback volume, visual magnification or angle of image rotation), the user positions a cursor over the graphical representation of the knob or slider, activates the cursor control device by clicking and holding the cursor control device's button and drags the cursor in a circular or linear motion to achieve the desired setting (e.g., volume, rotation or zoom level).
While more convenient than a command-line input interface, conventional GUI elements only permit the user to adjust the desired parameter in a linear fashion. That is, when the user adjusts the GUI element through a specified range (e.g., 45 degrees rotation or 1 inch of liner motion), conventional GUI elements adjust the associated parameter (e.g., image rotation or volume) a corresponding specified amount. This can make it difficult for a user to rapidly change the target parameter through a large range while also permitting the user to finely adjust the parameter's final or end-value. For example, if a 2 inch slider is used to control the rotation of a selected image, a 1 inch change in the slider control's position will cause a 180 degree rotation of the displayed image. While this permits the user to rapidly adjust the image's rotation through a wide range, the resolution of the GUI element can make it difficult to precisely control the final value.
Thus, it would be beneficial to provide a GUI element that permits a user to rapidly adjust an application's operation in a first (coarse) manner while also permitting the user to adjust the application's operation is a second (fine) manner.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONA graphical user interface (GUI) element permits a user to control an application in both a coarse manner and a fine manner. When a cursor is moved to coincide or overlap the displayed GUI element, parameter adjustment is made at a first (coarse) granularity so that rapid changes to the target parameter can be made (e.g., displayed zoom level, image rotation or playback volume). As the cursor is moved away from the displayed GUI element, parameter adjustment is made at a second (fine) granularity so that fine changes to the target parameter can be made. In one embodiment, the further the cursor is from the displayed GUI element, the finer the control. By way of example, consider the case when a cursor is moved through a 45 degree angle: when coincident with the GUI element, this action can cause a selected image to rotate through 45 degrees; when 1 inch away from the GUI element, this action may cause selected image to rotate through only 20 degrees; and when 3 inches away from the GUI element, this action may cause selected image to rotate through only 5 degrees.
The following description is presented to enable any person skilled in the art to make and use the invention as claimed and is provided in the context of the particular examples discussed below, variations of which will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, the claims appended hereto are not intended to be limited by the disclosed embodiments, but are to be accorded their widest scope consistent with the principles and features disclosed herein.
A graphical user interface element in accordance with the invention provides a user with the ability to adjust an operating characteristic of an application (e.g., zoom level, page or list display, image rotation, image exposure and volume), wherein a given amount of cursor movement causes a specified amount of change when the cursor is coincident/over the displayed GUI element and a lesser amount of change when the cursor is off or away from the GUI element. That is, the granularity of the change associated with a given cursor movement is modified as a function of the distance between the cursor and GUI element. For example, the further the cursor is moved from the displayed GUI element, the less change (e.g., the amount of zoom, movement within a page or list, rotation, exposure or volume change) a given amount of cursor movement will effect. One benefit of a GUI element in accordance with the invention is that a single control element can be used to rapidly “get close” to the user's desired setting while also permitting the user to use relatively large cursor movements to effect fine or small changes to the target parameter.
Referring to
With the cursor positioned away from GUI element 100, rotation is effected at a second granularity. Referring to
With the cursor positioned still further away from GUI element 100, rotation is effected at a third granularity. Referring to
It is significant to note that while the amount of cursor motion is the same in
In the illustrative embodiment of
Also in accord with the illustrative embodiment of
In accordance with the invention, GUI element 100 may be displayed through a user action such as, for example, by depressing a predetermined key (e.g., the Option key), a combination of predetermined keys (e.g., the Shift and Option keys), a pull-down menu, a pop-up menu or any means known in the art. GUI element 100 may be dismissed in similar fashion. Also in accordance with the invention, GUI element may be opaque for easy viewing or translucent so that the object/image “beneath” it may be viewed.
It is further noted that while the discussion above regarding
A GUI element in accordance with another embodiment of the invention may be used to control or set non-continuously changeable parameters. Illustrative GUI elements of this type provide the ability to scan through a document (e.g., by page, chapter and section) or scroll through a list (e.g., by alpha or date order).
Referring to
Referring to
In one embodiment, when the cursor does not overlap GUI element 200 (205), scroll operations are limited to the displayed page (or page range). In another embodiment, as the cursor is rotated about GUI element 200 scroll operations continue such that page to page (page-range to page-range) scrolling occurs. Other features such as how to display and dismiss GUI elements 200 and 210 and their visible characteristics (e.g., its translucency) may be controlled as discussed above with respect to
In other embodiments, a GUI element in accordance with the invention may be partitioned not by page number as shown in
Referring to
One of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that the principles set forth here are equally applicable to a GUI element that scrolls through a list sorted in accordance with, for example, date or size. In these embodiments, a GUI element in accordance with the invention may use sections having the appropriate category or label (e.g., last week, this week, next week, this year, last year, less than 1 Megabyte, between 1 and 2 megabytes, etc.).
In still another embodiment, a GUI element in accordance with the invention may be used to scroll through a list of items that are not easily ordered or for which there are too many categories to identify on the GUI element itself One example of this may be for date ordered lists or for images sorted in accordance with their size. Lists of this nature can be extremely large and, as a result, include to many elements to be easily displayed in categories that can be displayed on the GUI element. Referring to
Referring to
Once displayed, a check is made to determine if the cursor has moved by at least a predetermined amount such as, for example, one pixel (block 510). If the cursor has not moved (the “No” prong of block 510), a check is made to determine if a command to dismiss the GUI element has been received (block 515). If a “dismiss” command has not been received (the “No” prong of block 515), method 500 continues to look for cursor movement (block 510). If a dismiss command has been received (the “Yes” prong of block 515), the GUI element is dismissed or removed from the user's display (block 520).
If cursor movement has been detected (the “Yes” prong of block 510), a check is made to determine if the cursor is over the display region occupied by the GUI element (block 525). If the cursor is positioned over the GUI element (the “Yes” prong of block 525), the parameter being controlled (e.g., the amount of rotation, zoom, volume change, display brightness or the movement within a document or list) is adjusted based on the cursor's position with respect to the GUI element (block 530). For example, if the GUI element displays two or more categories of display (e.g., page ranges 1-20, 21-40, . . . ) the first element in the category over which the cursor is positioned is displayed. If the GUI element does not display a range (as with, for example, a continuously variable parameter such as the amount of zoom to apply), the parameter is adjusted by a first amount that is dependent upon the amount of cursor motion that has occurred about the GUI element's center. Method of operation 500 then continues at block 515 as discussed above.
If the detected cursor movement does not coincide or overlap the displayed GUI element (the “No” prong of block 525), the distance to the cursor from the center of the GUI element is determined (block 535) and, based on this and the amount the cursor has moved about the GUI element's center, the target parameter is adjusted (block 540). For example, a clock-wise rotation of the cursor about the GUI element's center may increase the target parameters value while a counter-clockwise rotation may decrease it. As described above, as the cursor is moved away from the GUI element, the amount of change applied to the parameter being controlled (e.g., the value or amount of zoom or the amount the contents in the underlying window is to be scrolled) is decreased. The relationship between the amount of this distance and the granularity of the change applied to the parameter being controlled is entirely up to the programmer—substantially any functional relationship may be used. For example, in one embodiment a linear function could be used. In another embodiment an exponential function could be used. In yet another embodiment, a combination of linear and exponential functions could be used such that a linear function could be used until the cursor is a specified distance from the GUI element and, at that point, an exponential function could be applied. Method of operation 500 then continues at block 515 as discussed above.
In still another embodiment, a GUI element in accordance with the invention may be embodied as a “static” control associated with one or more parameters (e.g., window scroll operations, image rotation and display zoom) for an executing application. Thus, a GUI element in accordance with the invention may be displayed during program activation and remain on the screen for so long as the program is active. As in prior described embodiments, when a user manipulates a cursor over the displayed GUI element, the parameter is changed in accordance with a first granularity and when the user manipulates the cursor away from the displayed GUI element (e.g., rotates the cursor about the GUI element's center point), the parameter is changed in accordance with a second granularity. As described above, the second granularity may be a function of both the amount of cursor motion (e.g., rotation about the GUI element's center point) and the distance the cursor is from the displayed GUI element.
In a variation of this last embodiment, the GUI element may be selectively displayed or hidden from view by a user in accordance with a specified command (e.g., a menu selection or command-key operation). In still another variation, the GUI element may automatically be displayed and hidden depending on the user's selected operation. For example, if the user selects an object in a display window and then selects a “rotate” action from the application's command interface (e.g., a menu), the program itself may generate a signal to display a GUI element in accordance with the invention.
It will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art that GUI elements in accordance with the invention and their methods of use (e.g., as illustrated in
One system within which such GUI element software may execute is the Mac OS environment. (MAC OS is a registered trademark of Apple Computer, Inc. of Cupertino, California.) Referring to
In the Mac OS X environment, user interface frameworks 640 are collections of APIs that provide specific capabilities. For example, the Application Kit (AppKit) is a collection of APIs containing all the objects needed to implement a graphical, event-driven user interface: windows, panels, buttons, menus, scrollers, and text fields. Similarly, Carbon is a collection of C programming interfaces that let a programmer implement basic application functionality such as the user interface, event handling, file management, and so on. In like manner, Image Kit is a collection of APIs that provide access to built-in image filters for both video and still images and support for creating custom filters.
In one embodiment, program code to implement a GUI element in accordance with the invention may be provided through the Image Kit framework. This is a logical location when the objects to be manipulated are graphical objects (see discussion above regarding
Finally, it will be recognized that while operation of a GUI element in accordance with the invention has been described in terms of a mechanism that increases granularity as a user moves a cursor further away from the GUI element, the invention may also be applied in reverse. That is, when the cursor overlaps the GUI element, a fine control may be applied and as the cursor is moved further from the GUI element, control of the target parameter could become progressively more coarse.
Claims
1. A method comprising:
- displaying a slider control;
- adjusting a parameter in accordance with a first granularity in response to detecting interaction on the slider control; and
- adjusting the parameter in accordance with a second granularity differing from the first granularity in response to detecting interaction with the slider control that is not on the slider control.
2. The method of claim 1, further comprising:
- determining a distance from the slider control to a point of particular interaction; and
- increasing or decreasing an extent to which manipulation of the slider control changes the parameter based on the distance.
3. The method of claim 1, further comprising:
- determining that the slider control has been selected;
- determining that a first point on the display is being touched;
- determining a first distance between the first point and the slider control;
- determining that a second point on the display is being touched;
- determining a second distance between the first point and the second point; and
- adjusting the parameter by an amount that is based on both the first distance and the second distance.
4. The method of claim 1, further comprising:
- determining that the slider control has been selected;
- determining that a first point on the display is being touched;
- determining a first distance between the first point and the slider control;
- determining that a second point on the display is being touched;
- determining a second distance between the first point and the second point; and
- adjusting the slider control based on both the first distance and the second distance.
5. The method of claim 1, further comprising:
- sliding an element of the slider control at a granularity that is based on a distance between the slider control and a point on a display at which a dragging operation commences.
6. The method of claim 1, further comprising:
- adjusting the parameter at a granularity that is based on a distance between the slider control and a point on a display at which a dragging operation commences.
7. The method of claim 1, further comprising:
- decreasing an extent to which interaction with the slider control changes the parameter as a distance between the slider control and a user-selected point increases.
8. The method of claim 1, further comprising:
- decreasing an extent to which interaction with the slider control changes the parameter as a distance between the slider control and a user-selected point increases.
9. The method of claim 1, further comprising:
- decreasing a quantity of degrees that interaction with the slider control rotates an object as a distance between the slider control and a user-selected point increases.
10. The method of claim 1, further comprising:
- changing a magnitude that interaction with the slider control adjusts a playback volume as a distance between the slider control and a user-selected point increases.
11. The method of claim 1, further comprising:
- changing a magnitude that interaction with the slider control adjusts a record volume as a distance between the slider control and a user-selected point increases.
12. The method of claim 1, further comprising:
- as a user-selected point is dragged further from the slider control, adjusting, based on a distance between the slider control and the user-selected point, a quantity of pages that interaction with the slider control causes to be scrolled.
13. The method of claim 1, further comprising:
- as a user-selected point is dragged further from the slider control, adjusting, based on a distance between the slider control and the user-selected point, a quantity of list items that interaction with the slider control causes to be scrolled.
14. A computer-readable storage medium storing instructions which, when executed by one or more processors, cause the one or more processors to:
- display a slider control;
- determine a distance from the slider control to a point of interaction; and
- increase or decrease an extent to which manipulation of the slider control changes a parameter based on the distance.
15. The computer-readable storage medium of claim 14, wherein the instructions, when executed by the one or more processors, cause the one or more processors to:
- adjust the parameter at a granularity that is based on a distance between the slider control and a point on a display at which a dragging operation commences.
16. The computer-readable storage medium of claim 14, wherein the instructions, when executed by the one or more processors, cause the one or more processors to:
- decrease an extent to which interaction with the slider control changes the parameter as a distance between the slider control and a user-selected point increases.
17. The computer-readable storage medium of claim 14, wherein the instructions, when executed by the one or more processors, cause the one or more processors to:
- decrease an extent to which interaction with the slider control changes the parameter as a distance between the slider control and a user-selected point increases.
18. The computer-readable storage medium of claim 14, wherein the instructions, when executed by the one or more processors, cause the one or more processors to:
- adjust, as a user-selected point is dragged further from the slider control, and based on a distance between the slider control and the user-selected point, a quantity of pages that interaction with the slider control causes to be scrolled.
19. The computer-readable storage medium of claim 14, wherein the instructions, when executed by the one or more processors, cause the one or more processors to:
- adjust, as a user-selected point is dragged further from the slider control, and based on a distance between the slider control and the user-selected point, a quantity of list items that interaction with the slider control causes to be scrolled.
20. The computer-readable storage medium of claim 14, wherein the instructions, when executed by the one or more processors, cause the one or more processors to:
- change a magnitude that interaction with the slider control adjusts a volume as a distance between the slider control and a user-selected point increases.
Type: Application
Filed: Jan 10, 2014
Publication Date: Jul 10, 2014
Patent Grant number: 10203857
Applicant: APPLE INC. (Cupertino, CA)
Inventors: Frank Doepke (San Jose, CA), Hans-Werner Neubrand (Cupertino, CA)
Application Number: 14/152,819